A year ago, July 1, one of our son's top-5 schools came in and made a great offer. My gut told me he should take it...a good friend advised that he should not. The good friend thought more would come and that if it wasn't his absolute 1st choice, that we should give it some more time. We did, and it worked out great.
My only point is that some of the 05's are very soon going to be getting offers and it will be tempting to take the first one or an early one. If its a place you really want to go, maybe you should go for it...but if the dream place is still in the game, maybe its worth the wait?
There's no sure thing here, so everyone should decide for themselves. But try not to be pressured into a decision if you don't really need to make one yet. This may only apply to a few...but again, "good fit" is often discussed here and 05's should think hard about whether or not that 1st or 2nd offer is a truly "good fit."
Any other thoughts?
----------------------- Go Bearcats!
Posts: 3657 | Location: California | Registered: June 22, 2003
I remember last summer one of my son's first July offers was very good for incoming freshman or so many told us....(not that it wasn't)...but as tempting as it was...my son just didn't quite know why or what it was that made him not just say "yes"...
he waited...that school actually gave him a lot of time to decide...as others did...
then others came in..some higher - some lower...and then his "fit" ...for him came in October...yes, October...on his 4th official visit...now we took several unofficial visits last summer/fall as well...
what surprised me was that "a coach friend" told my son when that first offer came..."take it...it's a great offer...good coaches and school.."
yes, that was true...but it was my son who was going to live there, play ball there, living on that campus day in and day out...
also, one thing I might make note of...3 of the colleges that my son seriously considered last year ...those coaches are leaving or have left the campuses for this next fall...
lots to think about...
Posts: 1742 | Location: New Boston, Texas | Registered: December 27, 2002
Absolutely a great reminder! I remember the first official visit offer which came in......we were scrambling around totally excited. Suddenly we got to thinking about the bigger picture and we said "WHAT are we doing? There's NO WAY he would go to that school" Our son called the coach and thanked him for his interest but declined the visit. It's VERY easy to lose sight of things during this process. You'll hear it over and over again......make sure it's a good fit. Not just a baseball fit.
There may a great school out there that is not on your sons TOP 5 List--- don't wear blinders because there are a myriad of opportunites out there if you take the time to find them--- and what if the Top 5 schools do not have openings at your sons position--Has he checked that out!!!
If you have not visited a certain school do not write it off--the visit may allow him to see the school in a different light
I won't touch the "we" statements--been there before---just make sure the decision is HIS decision not mom and dads
TRhit
Posts: 19228 | Location: Manchester, CT USA | Registered: December 26, 2002
TR - Not sure I'm interpreting you correctly, but I believe in the "we" when it comes to selecting a college, whether it be for baseball or not.
We have one son already in college (not playing sports) and yes, "we" selected his college. That is...his mother, himself, and me. Had it been entirely up to him, another school would have been his #1 choice (with his current school being #2). We selected #2 (with his concurrence) based on a number of factors that all amounted to "fit." Our multiple factors weighed more heavily than his one reason for choosing the other school. It was never a fight and he hasn't looked back. It turned out to be a great fit. Maybe we were lucky?
We have another son entering college this Fall and he will play baseball. "We" selected that one too. It was #1 for all three of us. Hopefully it will work out as well as son #1's selection did.
I understand and largely agree with your point about it being "his" decision...just don't think he gets the only vote.
----------------------- Go Bearcats!
Posts: 3657 | Location: California | Registered: June 22, 2003
Justbaseball, I understand the "we" in your post. There are a lot of factors when choosing a school that need to be taken into consideration (such as $$$$$$) that are beyond our sons understanding (like how are "we" going to pay for tuition, travleing expenses, housing etc that is not covered by the scholarship). Finding the right fit was important for our son, but some things had to be decided between hubby and myself (us) first!
Posts: 10893 | Location: South Florida | Registered: July 28, 2003
TR - Not always is he "the vote" that counts. There are many scenarios I could paint that you would certainly agree with where he is not the vote that counts. The most simple has to do with cost. If his vote is for a $40K/year school without any aid and "we" cannot afford that, well then his vote doesn't count at all, does it?
Tiger Paw Mom - did you have a name change recently?
----------------------- Go Bearcats!
Posts: 3657 | Location: California | Registered: June 22, 2003
Yes, parents have a lot of say about the decision, because we write the checks. But if we want school A and he wants school B and the finances are roughly the same, we have little else to say about it.
Specific to this thread, WE have to help HE make the decision that is best for him.
If his heart isn't into it, if he isn't comfortable there, if he isn't in the best position to do the best he can, he often won't be as successful.
WE might get him into a great school. But if HE doesn't graduate, was it the right choice? Would that mean WE blew it?
Great advice from everyone. We went through all of it this time last year. We were there to advise our son and help him look at the big picture. After his first official visit to a great school just an hour from home, he told us, as well as the coach that he wanted to wait and sign in the spring because some coaches had not yet seen him pitch. We told him that was fine and left it alone. Two days later, out of the blue he told us he was ready to commit to that great school an hour from home. Me and his mother could not be prouder. Again, be there to support and give advice, but let the final decision be theirs if at all possible. Go BSC Panthers!!!!
Posts: 36 | Location: Alabama | Registered: February 14, 2003
My son will be a junior next spring and has recieved letters from a few colleges wanting him to attend their summer camps. What is the offical month that the schools can make contact with the students?
Posts: 36 | Location: Central Texas | Registered: June 10, 2004
Buddy Baseball: I believe RHP05 was directing the answer to an 06(rising junior} not an 05, therefore the reply was right on the money!!! There has been a few changes to the NCAA guidelines as far as contact for the next coming year. Something to the effect of a phone call around April, but I am not exactly sure.
Posts: 65 | Location: PALM BEACH, FL USA | Registered: March 12, 2004
My son is in a similar situation. He has received an outstanding first offer (80%) from a D1 with a top academic record. His grades and test scores will bring the remaining 20%+ in academic dollars. School was not on our list due to lesser strength of baseball program. He has received calls from the top schools on our list, but no offers yet. His dream is to play pro ball, so he is concerned about not playing in a stronger conference. Any suggestions?
Posts: 2 | Location: st. louis | Registered: July 15, 2004
Modad05 - Our son is also in the midst of recruiting. My feeling is that it all gets back to the "right fit" question for your player. What would he (and you) rate as more important in his search for the right school: school name recognition for academics; strength of baseball program and chance for playoffs/CWS; amount of the financial assistance; chance to play as an underclassman; position specific coach & their tenure and probability of staying with the program; strength of position-specific development programs to improve his skills for the next level; availability of his academic major; size/location of school; etc. etc. There are tons of variables and each family is going to rank these differently. I know this doesn't answer your question. The problem is that each of us will place a different value on the great scholarship offer vs strength of baseball program. Good luck to you & your son in finding the right answer!
Posts: 1691 | Location: Northern California | Registered: December 26, 2002